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the reauthorization of the higher education act. it might not happen on time, if we look at the last authorization that was supposed to happen in 2003, they had 13 extension bills. i hope it doesn't take that long this time around. there will be a lot of proposals for major changes. then by redesign the student loan programs. they might redesign the grant programs. it is worth commenting on. >> i know that there is certainly aware of it. they have been hearing about this problem, that is one thing that does not require congressional action. the consumer financial protection bureau is the new game in town. aople don't think of them as federal loan side. even on the federal side, on the ground, people have already borrowed. having the existing programs work well as incredibly important. >> president obama said a lot on the campaign trail that he wanted to tie federal student and federal aid. we have not seen specifics on that. >> we have seen specifics from a prior version of the proposal. for the campus based funding, the perkins loa
the reauthorization of the higher education act. it might not happen on time, if we look at the last authorization that was supposed to happen in 2003, they had 13 extension bills. i hope it doesn't take that long this time around. there will be a lot of proposals for major changes. then by redesign the student loan programs. they might redesign the grant programs. it is worth commenting on. >> i know that there is certainly aware of it. they have been hearing about this problem, that is...
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Jan 1, 2013
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there is much to be done to educate the older generation of publishers to understand that they will have to engage on every level with their audiences in the next phase. >> my name is jeff roberts, former broadcast journalist. winston churchill famously said democracy is the worst possible form of government. i am curious what country you think might be doing a better job in disseminating news through the mass media where it is not as hysterical, not as pointed as our news coverage is. does anybody do it better, or is this just the way it is in free society? i hope you don't say great britain. >> i think this is the way it is. if you go to europe, you will find that they did not seem to go through this golden age. the big newspapers there are not owned by parties, they are affiliated with parties in their ideology. the editorial page and the news pages will work together to report stories, where you are we have this great fire wall between the editorial pages and the news pages. i do think this is the worst possible media except for all the others. >> so there is no place like home. >> i
there is much to be done to educate the older generation of publishers to understand that they will have to engage on every level with their audiences in the next phase. >> my name is jeff roberts, former broadcast journalist. winston churchill famously said democracy is the worst possible form of government. i am curious what country you think might be doing a better job in disseminating news through the mass media where it is not as hysterical, not as pointed as our news coverage is....
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Dec 24, 2012
12/12
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i need to get an education. i want to challenge myself. >> , the talk about what you did as a teenager. can you talk about the training and hours, a typical day? what was your school like? then a lot to talk about how that change you. >> i look back at my time on the ice and the way i was training, i was invincible in some ways. i did not enjoy taking a day off because i felt like i was losing time. but competitors in china are, rush show were trading on a daily basis. -- my competitors in china and russia work training. this is a position of irritation of a triple jump. i was like a robot in the sense that everything i was doing, the hours i was putting in it, the morning, the afternoon, the evening, i trained all they basically. my first session, 10:00, i was basically of the rank by nine and my last session would be at 6:00-6:30. then i would go to the gym. i look back, no wonder i was in really good shape. >> where did that drive? how did that drive? where do you get that drive? >> we were talking earlier ab
i need to get an education. i want to challenge myself. >> , the talk about what you did as a teenager. can you talk about the training and hours, a typical day? what was your school like? then a lot to talk about how that change you. >> i look back at my time on the ice and the way i was training, i was invincible in some ways. i did not enjoy taking a day off because i felt like i was losing time. but competitors in china are, rush show were trading on a daily basis. -- my...
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from the educated population, there is a strong sense of stop aid. my question is around innovation. there are people doing important things like clinton, goldman sachs, and without that external money, how does that economy actually grow and develop? >> you have the right people to ask. you take the un. >> the sad thing about the un declaration of human rights, the agencies themselves do not respect the declaration. the world bank, the organization i know best being a prisoner there for 14 years, they never once used the word democracy. i had a blog tormenting him about this. he has never used the word democracy and he is not allowed to use that word. the world bank was not even endorsing the un declaration for human rights. they were giving aid to autocrats in ethiopia, using aid and to the document -- to end the document, star of his political opponents. -- starve his political opponents. when the un is not recognizing that right -- >> we reduce poverty by relying on aid, giving the africans more aid, that is rubbish. all i heard is that they can'
from the educated population, there is a strong sense of stop aid. my question is around innovation. there are people doing important things like clinton, goldman sachs, and without that external money, how does that economy actually grow and develop? >> you have the right people to ask. you take the un. >> the sad thing about the un declaration of human rights, the agencies themselves do not respect the declaration. the world bank, the organization i know best being a prisoner...
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Dec 24, 2012
12/12
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. >> he does not take after his father -- a classical education, books? >> when he was five or six he was writing his own histories of medieval warfare. i stayed back. we played a wonderful video game, age of kings. you build your own castles and i let him play as much as he wanted to. he took to reading. he loves history, faulkner, he is a reader. so i just stand back. he will go wherever he goes. >> what about the 1980's -- what kind of work did you do then? >> at a certain point, after factories and bartending, my father had been an employee at a japanese company and outside of boston. he had moved up to vice president to president with no equity in share stock. my brother and i had worked there in high school in the factory. the company made steam valves and big heavy iron casting for steam traps on oil lines or submarines. it was light manufacturing, but dirty, dusty, and that is what a summer job consisted of. my brother is older -- he came out of the army and went in as junior purchasing clerk. sometime in the late 1970's i had had an of bluegrass.
. >> he does not take after his father -- a classical education, books? >> when he was five or six he was writing his own histories of medieval warfare. i stayed back. we played a wonderful video game, age of kings. you build your own castles and i let him play as much as he wanted to. he took to reading. he loves history, faulkner, he is a reader. so i just stand back. he will go wherever he goes. >> what about the 1980's -- what kind of work did you do then? >> at a...
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Dec 24, 2012
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host: at any time take after his father whether he would study classical education, becomes? guest: when he was five or six he was writing his only little history of medieval warfare. i stayed back. we played a wonderful video g e game, age of kings. it is very -- you build your own castles and that was -- i let little play it as much as he wanted to. he took to reading and he loves histo faulkner. he is a reader. so, i just stand back because he will go wherever he goes. host: go back there. what about the 1980's. what work did you do then? guest: at a certain point after factories and bar tending my father had been an employee, the japanese with call him a company man in a small manufacturing company outside of boston and he had moved from sales manager to vice president to president without any equity. my brother and i both worked there in high school in the factory. the company made steams valves and heavy iron castings for steam traps on oil lines or submarines. it was lit manufacturing but -- light manufacturing but dirty, dusty. that is what our summer jobs consisted o
host: at any time take after his father whether he would study classical education, becomes? guest: when he was five or six he was writing his only little history of medieval warfare. i stayed back. we played a wonderful video g e game, age of kings. it is very -- you build your own castles and that was -- i let little play it as much as he wanted to. he took to reading and he loves histo faulkner. he is a reader. so, i just stand back because he will go wherever he goes. host: go back there....
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Dec 29, 2012
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we never did get into the education thing at all. we are focused on doing a job. my point on education is that there is something revolutionary that needs to happen. if you look now in the internet age and realize the rate at which a student downloads information -- the people who are really smart are bored. i think within maybe 20-25 years, you won't see a classroom typically like we do, where you see everybody goes to a classroom. it is for that reason, it is not a good thing to teach people who are going to be innovators later on. next question. >> thank you very much for your talk. what skills, academic, etc., do you need at early ages to facilitate creativity and innovation? how can parents and schools shape these attributes for kids? >> in answering that, i am going to focus on word that you said. you said cultivate. the point i have tried to make is that if things are going around in the world outside of the kid's community, outside of his local interface and outside of his school, if he sees wonderful progress happen, that is so different -- that is why we
we never did get into the education thing at all. we are focused on doing a job. my point on education is that there is something revolutionary that needs to happen. if you look now in the internet age and realize the rate at which a student downloads information -- the people who are really smart are bored. i think within maybe 20-25 years, you won't see a classroom typically like we do, where you see everybody goes to a classroom. it is for that reason, it is not a good thing to teach people...
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Dec 31, 2012
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helped people get jobs, put food on the table for families and helped those families get an education. mr. speaker, this great american lady celebrates a birthday today. i am sorry i am not with her but i am in spirit. happy birthday, mom. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman from illinois, mr. shimkus, for five minutes. mr. shimkus: i ask unanimous consent to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: without objection. mr. shimkus: thank you. thank you, mr. speaker. mr. speaker, it's good to come down for morning hour, especially today, to hear my colleagues come down and thank staff and people who have been important in their lives, especially in their careers. jason altmire, what a great job he did thanking his staff. my friend, russ carnahan, from across the river, the mississippi river, thanking family, wife, son, staff, for the work we do here. many go unappreciated too much. but mr. speaker, i did break the code on why we're here so late today. i know a lot of people want to know. we can blame jay pierson for that. jay is retiring today. this
helped people get jobs, put food on the table for families and helped those families get an education. mr. speaker, this great american lady celebrates a birthday today. i am sorry i am not with her but i am in spirit. happy birthday, mom. the speaker pro tempore: the chair recognizes the gentleman from illinois, mr. shimkus, for five minutes. mr. shimkus: i ask unanimous consent to revise and extend my remarks. the speaker pro tempore: without objection. mr. shimkus: thank you. thank you, mr....
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you're saying that edge of the price of education is going up because people are able to borrow more of the subsidy yes and yes absolutely the absolutely i mean you have something there's no way people could go to college that the tuition is totally outpaced the market they would have why do that and put them in for two hundred years in federal government got in there and got lockstep with them in they just increase or decrease how much each student can get when ronald reagan came into office roughly eighty percent was seventy nine and change roughly eighty percent of the cost of college education was paid for by federal state or local governments twenty twenty percent was paid for by students today roughly eighty one percent of tuitions paid for by students and less than seventeen percent is paid by federal state but those students are naples we had flown in upside down it went with their unable to go but it's been flipped upside down for most of their history this year i'm sorry loans zero out the grants and then the price falls it has to it has to do we can afford it nobody could
you're saying that edge of the price of education is going up because people are able to borrow more of the subsidy yes and yes absolutely the absolutely i mean you have something there's no way people could go to college that the tuition is totally outpaced the market they would have why do that and put them in for two hundred years in federal government got in there and got lockstep with them in they just increase or decrease how much each student can get when ronald reagan came into office...
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a lot of college debt i sure do you know the deal used to be that you paid a significant amount for education but in turn that gave you a much higher salary later but now the system works in reverse many young americans studied very hard to not make any money at all around nine percent of americans with student loans have defaulted and at least nine but maybe up to eighteen percent are ninety days late with their payments given the situation the people at u.c. berkeley were nice enough to give away a million dollars in scholarships for everyone everyone that's an illegal immigrant yeah that's right if you're born in america then pay to jump the border and enjoy the red carpet education treatment the people who will be getting the scholarships are mostly the children of illegal immigrants who spent many of their formative years in america and yeah i can see the logic that could be hard for them to get an education when the when they aren't citizens but they came into the country illegally it isn't taxpayers jobs to help them but wait berkeley it's a private institution so i guess they can give
a lot of college debt i sure do you know the deal used to be that you paid a significant amount for education but in turn that gave you a much higher salary later but now the system works in reverse many young americans studied very hard to not make any money at all around nine percent of americans with student loans have defaulted and at least nine but maybe up to eighteen percent are ninety days late with their payments given the situation the people at u.c. berkeley were nice enough to give...
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a ritual and educates in imperial russia. the tradition of staging bowls is being revived in our time. but these are parties with pavel. suck. i demand satisfaction. wealthy british style. markets. find out what's really happening to the global economy with. a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune into kinds a report on our. so you love rolph russia's foreign minister thank you very much for being with r.t. today my pleasure you're ending your ear with a visit to india russia has been clear in its support for india's aspirations to become a permanent member of un security council how do you think the much criticised joint security council will benefit from india's participation. first of all i would say that criticism is not always warranted the latest wave of criticism was related to the fact that the security council allegedly cannot act on syria. by these by the desire to see some action on the part of the security council the critics wanted the posse resolution under chapter seven which provides for
a ritual and educates in imperial russia. the tradition of staging bowls is being revived in our time. but these are parties with pavel. suck. i demand satisfaction. wealthy british style. markets. find out what's really happening to the global economy with. a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tune into kinds a report on our. so you love rolph russia's foreign minister thank you very much for being with r.t. today my pleasure you're ending your ear with a visit to india...
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Dec 31, 2012
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it's education programs, it's environmental protection, it's social service programs, it's against, it's homeland security, it's law enforcement. that's about a third of our budget. and it's not the part of the budget that's driving this -- it's not a part of the spending budget that's driving the deficit and debt much that's being driven by the growth in entitlements, which are becoming particularly for a good reason, which is that the american people are living longer, therefore taking much more money out of programs like medicare than they put in, and i suppose for reasons that are not so good, which is the cost of health care continues to go up. so we proved ourselves incapable of dealing with this crisis as part of the normal process of compromise, and so we created this cliff which was intentionally made so harmful that our assumption was that we would not allow ourselves to go over the cliff. because it would be so hurtful. and, again, that's why i say no deal, in this case, is not better than a bad deal. no deal is the worst deal because it means we go over the cliff. why isual t
it's education programs, it's environmental protection, it's social service programs, it's against, it's homeland security, it's law enforcement. that's about a third of our budget. and it's not the part of the budget that's driving this -- it's not a part of the spending budget that's driving the deficit and debt much that's being driven by the growth in entitlements, which are becoming particularly for a good reason, which is that the american people are living longer, therefore taking much...
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of course this fall here was first educated to the war of eighteen twelve it wasn't so much about russia as they but it was the first such event that was held after the war a certain degree of courage was required to hold the ball at that time this stance is where it all began. and with several events every year they're becoming very popular even if you're not experienced you are encouraged to join in and there are plenty of helpful partners waiting to show you the ropes. movement in music have always stood the russian soul but now in the twenty first century more and more people seem to be learning these traditional courtly dances that hark back to a bygone age i wanted to find out what makes them so appealing to a modern nor dns and how long it might take to get an absolute beginner to the book but. there's a school in moscow which claims it can teach anybody how to dance so i am going to put the theory to the test and apparently there are always sorts of men so hopefully this should be a place for me. the richer good evening everyone today will learn the viennese waltz which you can d
of course this fall here was first educated to the war of eighteen twelve it wasn't so much about russia as they but it was the first such event that was held after the war a certain degree of courage was required to hold the ball at that time this stance is where it all began. and with several events every year they're becoming very popular even if you're not experienced you are encouraged to join in and there are plenty of helpful partners waiting to show you the ropes. movement in music have...
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child rights convention saying contradicts principles of additional american education what principles are they talking about when i think it's more to do with the american constitution i'm certainly not an expert on the american constitution but there are states i know where for example punishments which go against the un convention on human rights of the child where those punishments are still on the statute books so it would seem to be that although the u.s. actually took a lead in framing the u.n. constitution of human rights of the child they're actually having some problems in ratifying it because of the because of the nature of the nature of the jurist durative juridical system and causing the death of a child can lead to a life sentence in the us can't it but when it comes to adoptive children their parents appear to get off more likely would you say that's true or not i don't think that's true from what i've seen perhaps with one or two exceptions the punishments that have been handed down to those parents who've been found guilty of killing a child whether adopted or their ow
child rights convention saying contradicts principles of additional american education what principles are they talking about when i think it's more to do with the american constitution i'm certainly not an expert on the american constitution but there are states i know where for example punishments which go against the un convention on human rights of the child where those punishments are still on the statute books so it would seem to be that although the u.s. actually took a lead in framing...
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jump the border and enjoy the red carpet education treatment the people who will be getting the scholarships are mostly the children of illegal immigrants who spent many of their formative years in america and yeah i could see the logic that could be hard for them to get an education wonder when they aren't citizens but they came into the country illegally it isn't taxpayers jobs to help them but wait berkeley is a private institution so i guess they can give out the money to whoever they want whenever they want however they want but berkeley management if you're watching this i would really appreciate if you chose some financial mercy to american citizens it isn't like they don't need the help but that's just my opinion. you know sometimes you see a story and it seems so you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else you hear or see some other part of it and realize everything you thought you knew you don't i'm tom hard look at the big picture. russia would be so much brighter if you. song from feinstein fresh. start on t.v. dot com. hello welcome back the french embassy in
jump the border and enjoy the red carpet education treatment the people who will be getting the scholarships are mostly the children of illegal immigrants who spent many of their formative years in america and yeah i could see the logic that could be hard for them to get an education wonder when they aren't citizens but they came into the country illegally it isn't taxpayers jobs to help them but wait berkeley is a private institution so i guess they can give out the money to whoever they want...
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because we have lots and lots of problems that frustrate the people who are problems with health care education transporting for structure you name it there are a lot of things we need to change in our daily life so let's not waste our time let's start the changes i want to talk about in other subjects i know it's important he. used to look like a deal in it with more school being the hole in the center but no it's different how a sector of the most has been merged with moscow before and know the city looks like a keyhole and the most cohesion looks like a horseshoe i believe you've lost one eighth of a territory that a lot of lent. but you know that russian people believe that a horseshoe brings good luck but still you know there has always been this tendency for big cities spread out and take over areas around them people from the suburbs commute into work in the city and so on do you think there's nothing wrong with this send people even say there is no need for the most they see there should only be the greater moscow in the remaining part of the most cohesion should be divided between the
because we have lots and lots of problems that frustrate the people who are problems with health care education transporting for structure you name it there are a lot of things we need to change in our daily life so let's not waste our time let's start the changes i want to talk about in other subjects i know it's important he. used to look like a deal in it with more school being the hole in the center but no it's different how a sector of the most has been merged with moscow before and know...
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is welfare health education and debt interest. now we're not going to have lower taxes and smaller state without reducing spending on those areas and i recognize that that's why i talk so often about mutuals i really think what welfare and health in particular would be better delivered by mutual lives in those services it is worrying though isn't it i mean if you roll back the welfare state isn't there a huge risk of leaving the poorest and most vulnerable in society exposed well this is the this is why i are i'm so insistent that we must change the system of money because this this cycle it's a complex cycle of state spending on the deficit plus currency debasement to maintain this idea that we can all live each other's expense through the state it's increasingly obvious that it is a cruel fairy tale now i come from a very ordinary background my mother my father dependent on the state pension and the n.h.s. but it's a cruel fiction we have to get to the point where we're actually able to to sustain ourselves in a way which can go
is welfare health education and debt interest. now we're not going to have lower taxes and smaller state without reducing spending on those areas and i recognize that that's why i talk so often about mutuals i really think what welfare and health in particular would be better delivered by mutual lives in those services it is worrying though isn't it i mean if you roll back the welfare state isn't there a huge risk of leaving the poorest and most vulnerable in society exposed well this is the...
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. >> leanne asked, i'm wondering if her parents are paying for her education. >> ashley said simply spoiled millennial. >> and cherilyn added spoiled brat. >> drew wrote to us saying creepy helicopter parents need to let kids be kids, that's pretty ridiculous. >> great answers, everyone. keep them coming in. >>> more to come on cnn saturday morning. we'll be right back. >>> over the next 50 years, we needed more food produced than the last 10,000 years combined. >> we're pushing the limits on land, already seeing food shortages in some parts of the world. so we need to pick up the pace, i think. >> and really take it to the next level offshore and open up new frontiers for farming. [ male announcer ] this december, remember you can stay in and like something ♪ or you can get out there with your family and actually like something. ♪ the lexus december to remember sales event is on offering some of our best values of the year. this is the pursuit of perfection. a body at rest tends to stay at rest... while a body in motion tends to stay in motion. staying active can actually ease arthriti
. >> leanne asked, i'm wondering if her parents are paying for her education. >> ashley said simply spoiled millennial. >> and cherilyn added spoiled brat. >> drew wrote to us saying creepy helicopter parents need to let kids be kids, that's pretty ridiculous. >> great answers, everyone. keep them coming in. >>> more to come on cnn saturday morning. we'll be right back. >>> over the next 50 years, we needed more food produced than the last 10,000...
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that that's probably the least efficient way of generating jobs you get much more by putting it in education or medical care. and defense is higher defense production is highly capital intensive not like it's and that's one of the reasons that or has that that effect of creating fewer jobs than other alternative views apple intensive there's a lot of banking involved by capital i mean this is a very expensive machine it's machinery. that produces these things a life tech machine when i say ok what what kind of you know it seems like we have a national security system a defense system right now that's really built for a potential war with the soviet union and in the meantime we've got you know a single hacker in whether it's in louisiana and saudi arabia could you know bring down half a city it seems. aren't we looking at a different face of future warfare absent absolutely and we're still in a cold war mindset maintaining thousands of nuclear weapons that we don't need. even when we're trying to cover for other nations that have agreed not to produce them we produce the f. twenty two fighter
that that's probably the least efficient way of generating jobs you get much more by putting it in education or medical care. and defense is higher defense production is highly capital intensive not like it's and that's one of the reasons that or has that that effect of creating fewer jobs than other alternative views apple intensive there's a lot of banking involved by capital i mean this is a very expensive machine it's machinery. that produces these things a life tech machine when i say ok...
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state educators say the goal is realistic. . >>> adoptions between american families and russian children could soon end. now that russia's president is expected to sign a bill into law by the end of the week. ktvu's mike mibach is live in the newsroom with the effect it's having on one young woman. >> reporter: that's right. it's like a political chess match with thousands of children in the middle. since 1992, more than 60,000 russian children have been adopted by u.s. families and here in the bay area the story hits home for one of those 60,000. a determined set of eyes. >> i just love clothes. >> reporter: a patient hand. >> i said it would be really cool if i could design them. >> reporter: 18-year-old julia rally has a dream and her life sketch he's a designer. >> they have a wonderful two- year program for fashion. >> reporter: in 2001, julia was an orphan in russia. >> she was so small, i could carry her through the airport myself on my hip. >> people in the orphanage who get kicked out at 15 and 16ened you're basically -- and you're basically on the streets and you're trying to m
state educators say the goal is realistic. . >>> adoptions between american families and russian children could soon end. now that russia's president is expected to sign a bill into law by the end of the week. ktvu's mike mibach is live in the newsroom with the effect it's having on one young woman. >> reporter: that's right. it's like a political chess match with thousands of children in the middle. since 1992, more than 60,000 russian children have been adopted by u.s. families...
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is so important for success in the world and yet education is such a financial burden on the middle class you know even you know from the time you start going to kindergarten that class divisions starts to shape your life it's like we're moving back to the fifteenth century so what what do we do is there going to be a new renaissance or a new and what rome well i think what we should do and what i hope we will do is have you know a new progressive era but it does have to be new and we have to people who are worried about this have to come up with some new ideas. we started our conversation tom by talking about the parallels with the nineteenth century in the industrial revolution and i talked about that a lot with economists in doing the research for my book and some of them would say well you know we should be reassured by those parallels because after all did the industrial revolution turn out to be a good thing and everything settled down and my response to that is to say yes it did but let's think about what it took to get to that settle down period it took two world wars to dep
is so important for success in the world and yet education is such a financial burden on the middle class you know even you know from the time you start going to kindergarten that class divisions starts to shape your life it's like we're moving back to the fifteenth century so what what do we do is there going to be a new renaissance or a new and what rome well i think what we should do and what i hope we will do is have you know a new progressive era but it does have to be new and we have to...
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scientist who wanted a better way of life for his people but even with the most progressive ideas and education many say they don't want to trade the modern life for their beloved. i have returned to the tundra and i actually like it here if you're outside there's fresh air fresh water looks at the site you can see deer it's a joyful sight. a sentiment that hopefully ensures that russia's northern reindeer will have caretakers for generations to come. or. hello to you in a very warm welcome to business see stock markets of some of the most troubled european countries are among the best performers indices of greece spain portugal and italy that were singled out in a group of countries called pigs grew on average by around thirty percent in the second half of this year while russia is my sex gay dual just a third of this let's speak more details with our correspondent on a particular was looking closer at the story so what is going on well dmitri it looks like all the european pigs contra's turned out to be very bullish this year they did make investors happy and those who bet on them and investe
scientist who wanted a better way of life for his people but even with the most progressive ideas and education many say they don't want to trade the modern life for their beloved. i have returned to the tundra and i actually like it here if you're outside there's fresh air fresh water looks at the site you can see deer it's a joyful sight. a sentiment that hopefully ensures that russia's northern reindeer will have caretakers for generations to come. or. hello to you in a very warm welcome to...
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he claims the connecticut board of education and the state education commissioner failed to take steps to protect the children from, quote, foreseeable harm. he says his client whom he is not identifying suffered serious emotional and psychological trauma as a result of the shooting. >>> the fbi is reporting an increase in a request for background checks for new gun purchases in the wake of the connecticut school shooting. this as new bills have been introduced calling forearmed teachers. claudia is live in los angeles. claudia, we know some states allow teachers to bring licensed concealed weapons into public schools. >> yes, just a few do, harris, allowing it without exception, hawaii, new hampshire, oregon and utah. we are in salt lake city and hundreds attended a training seminar. in a violent situation the educators were taught to first initiate a lock down, but if that failed, the teachers want to know how to respond properly. >> you know, i think that a lot of people have a fear of guns and what they can do. but i think also maybe they are not quite educated, but sometimes the o
he claims the connecticut board of education and the state education commissioner failed to take steps to protect the children from, quote, foreseeable harm. he says his client whom he is not identifying suffered serious emotional and psychological trauma as a result of the shooting. >>> the fbi is reporting an increase in a request for background checks for new gun purchases in the wake of the connecticut school shooting. this as new bills have been introduced calling forearmed...